Tips

Donna S.

Verified

Report|a year ago

Add Hush puppies to the menu!

Helen P.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Recommend it.

Doris A.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

I don't especially like my meat sliced and I mentioned that to the person behind the counter and he said next time he would chop it up for me. Probably won't be a next time as they are pretty far away just to get a sandwich.

Patty N.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Ribs were over done did not fall off the bone

John F.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Great meal

Johnnie B.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Will go again.

Martin B.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Beans and mac & cheese are made at the restaurant - - very good sides.

Elizabeth R.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Very friendly, thoughtful service - quite appreciated! Just wish there were more healthy sides than the green salad.

Janet H.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

Yummy food, very nice staff, reasonable prices

Michael M.

Verified

Report|2 years ago

My wife and I watch our salt intake due to health issues. Their sauce is noticeably less salty then most b-que sauces but just as good if not better than others. Try the spicy flavor.

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From Our Editors

At Salt Creek Barbeque, two distinct aromas weave through the air: a cocktail of herbs and sauces distilling itself into barbecue sauce, and the scent of hickory from a smoker, where each of Salt Creek's meats spends 5–12 hours to enhance flavor and unwind from its fight with the butcher. The house-made sauce drenches dishes such as hand-pulled pork and shaved brisket—stacked atop sandwich buns or texas toast—and bastes plates of slow-smoked meaty rib tips with its aromatic flavor. The signature sauce makes yet another appearance as a uniform for chicken wings, also available in coats of buffalo or spicy sauce that diners wash down with fountain drinks or pitchers of domestic and imported beers from the full-service bar. A full slate of burgers and catfish sandwiches round out the menu of quintessentially American fare, accompanied by classic sides of corn bread and mashed potatoes. Salt Creek Barbecue also caters for special events, forging party-sized portions of its iconic menu items.

We could argue for days about what makes for true barbecue: the sauce or the cooking style. We could debate about whether baby back ribs trump St. Louis–style (which, I’ve discovered, is really a cut, not a cooking method). Do you sauce it before or after cooking? Do you need a dry rub?
Though ribs are among my favorite foods, I’m not really interested in categorizing them. I’m in it for the texture and the flavor. Chicago’s rib landscape is vast and varied, and I’m here to help you find the ribs that fit your palate.
If you, like me, wish your voice had a little bit of a twang
In the American South, they dry-rub their ribs with a blend of spices before smoking them, long and slow. The sauce comes last, usually just before serving. At Fat Willy’s (2416 W. Schubert Ave.), they hold no allegiance to any particular state, accompanying their ribs with texas toast and jalapeño cornbread.
If you use the term “barbecue” loosely
“Meat jello” is a term food critic Michael Nagrant introduced to me when I chatted with him about Chicago’s barbecue style. He, like me, does not like the meat to be fall-off-the-bone tender, but if you’re into that, head to Chicago’s legendary Twin Anchors (1655 N. Sedgwick St.). It’s been holding court in this historical building since 1932, the favorite of many celebrities, including Frank Sinatra. The slow-cooked “tavern-style” boiled and baked ribs stir up long debates as to whether they should be called "barbecue," but every year the restaurant earns the Bib Gourmand (which it did in 2013 for the third year in a row). Gale Street Inn (4914 W. Milwaukee Ave.) courts similar controversy as the restaurant sauces its ribs before roasting them in the oven (which is, admittedly, how my mom does them).
For a classic Chicago cut
Some of my fondest food memories include my dad coming home with a bucket of rib tips from Carson’s (multiple locations), topped with a layer of now-soggy steak fries. Rib tips are a classic Chicago cut, and, as the menu states, these do “NOT fall off the bone.”
If you have no preference for the Cubs or the Sox
Perhaps you’ll show some allegiance for the North or South Side when you taste the barbecue. Up north, barbecue houses smoke their meats in a metal box-style apparatus, like the Southern Pride smoker at Smoque (3800 N. Pulaski Rd.). On the South Side, an aquarium-style smoker slow-cooks the meat, which requires more attention than the metal box. Classic joints include The Original Leon’s (4550 S. Archer Ave.) and Honey 1 (2241 N. Western Ave.), which has replanted itself in the North Side neighborhood of Bucktown.
If you’re outside the city limits
Russell’s Barbecue (1621 N. Thatcher Ave.) has been serving its sweet, vinegary sauce since 1930. Evanston’s Hecky’s (1902 Green Bay Rd.) claims “It’s in the sauce,” and theirs is from an old creole family recipe and is so popular, they ship it all over the country.
If you want something a little different
Smalls (4009 N. Albany Ave.) glazes its St. Louis ribs with a sweet Filipino street-style sauce and serves them with toasted garlic rice. At Stephanie Izard’s Girl and the Goat (809 W. Randolph St.), chefs experiment with lamb ribs—sometimes even goat ribs pop up on the specials board. You can also find lamb at Flagship (1622 W. Belmont Ave.), served with an Asian-inspired barbecue sauce. And I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention kalbi, Korean short ribs, sweetening palates at Chicago Kalbi (3752 W. Lawrence Ave.) and Cho Sun Ok (4200 N. Lincoln Ave.).
Photo credit: Andrew Nawrocki, Groupon

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